Bryant (nonalcoholic) Grapevine director of operations. “I first met Chris during the preparation for the Grapevine video,” Albin says. “It’s a great video, it really moves you along, and very professionally done, and he had a lot to do with that.” When Albin took an extended leave, the choice of Chris to fill in for him as interim publisher was a natural one. Well before he came to G.S.O. Chris had had extensive experience in magazine publishing, but his career was nearly derailed by his alcoholism. Born and raised in Ossining, New York, Chris began drinking when he was 12. “It took me five years to get out of high school because I missed so much school drinking. In 1978, when I was 20, I realized how much alcohol had ruined my life and so I stopped for eight years, although without a program.” During that time, Chris graduated from Syracuse University and started working for Family Circle magazine at the same time as he attended New York University’s Graduate School of Journalism. But when his first wife and he split up, he went on what he describes as a “two-year binge.” Seeking to recover and find his way back into graduate school, he remembered seeing an advertisement in the back of the NYU student newspaper: “A.A. meets every Monday, Room 413, Student Center, 12:30 pm.” Chris actually attended that meeting. It was May 1989, and it was, Chris says, “the best decision I ever made. I asked for help for the first time. Afterwards, people came up to me and gave me a Big Book and a New York meeting book. They told me to do 90 and 90, to get phone numbers and call people. I couldn’t believe it.” Chris’ personal and professional life took off after he got sober. He remarried — he and his wife Gail now have two adult children, Maggie and Cooper. Chris became managing editor of the Family Circle book division, did a stint in Des Moines, Iowa, with Meredith Books — he fondly remembers the A.A. meetings in Des Moines. A managing editor job at Reader’s Digest brought him back to New York, where he became editor in chief of their publishing division, before taking the G.S.O. publishing director job, which he considered “my Higher Power giving me an opportunity.” Before Albin decided to retire, Grapevine had been moving forward with crucial changes. “Things were getting interesting,” Albin points out, “and you could just see the staff becoming engaged and excited. We had all this content and material, and we really began to use it to make up a unified brand” with initiatives like the Grapevine YouTube channel, the Audio Project and the redesigned aagrapevine website. Grapevine had also begun partnering with a well-known book distributor, to give its books a wider reach. “Chris is the right person for Grapevine right now,” Albin says. “I like his sobriety and his ability to work with other people. I like his editorial experience. He’s taking the job at a pivotal time.” Box 4-5-9, Fall 2021
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“I’m very happy with the trust that has been put in me,” Chris says. “Such a wonderful magazine and Twelfth Step tool. I’ve already worked with this great staff for seven months and we’ve got strong support from freelancers and vendors. We’re moving forward with being more accessible to people. I want a working Grapevine app that really is the magazine for that month. In book publishing we have these wonderful books and we’re working hard to make them available in print, e-book and audio. I love podcasts. When I can’t sleep at night, I listen to ‘The Moth.’ The Grapevine podcast will soon be getting underway, just people talking about recovery – very peaceful, almost as if you were at the diner with a friend.” In all, Chris says, “While the General Service Conference serves as the collective voice of A.A., Grapevine publishes the collected voices of A.A. We’re trying very hard to bring these stories to people, in many different ways, and to help inspire day-to- day recovery.”
n Class B Trustee Deborah K. Joins the General Service Board Following her selection in April at the 71st General Service Conference, the General Service Board of A.A. welcomed Deborah K. as a Class B (alcoholic) general service trustee. Deborah was first exposed to Alcoholics Anonymous when she was 15 years old. “My friend group was sobering up, and many of the people I knew were being sent off to treatment,” she remembers. Alcoholism ran in Deborah’s family and before long she discovered that she might have a problem, too. “I fell into the rooms of A.A. for the wrong reasons and stayed for the right reasons,” Deborah says. That was in 1983; she now has 38 years of continuous sobriety. A few years after becoming sober, she went on to college, eventually earned her Ph.D. in clinical psychology, and began her career with a specialty in neuropsychology. In 1996, Deborah landed a position and moved to Durham, North Carolina, which she describes as “a little pocket of A.A. heaven.” Having completed her studies, Deborah had the time to jump into service. “I was fortunate to have great sponsorship that sponsored me into service,” she says. Over the years, she has served in many positions within the A.A. service structure — from being a Panel 59 delegate to her four-year tenure as a nontrustee director on the A.A.W.S. board from 2017 to 2021 before being elected as a general service trustee in April. “What has been most surprising about service work is how much of a spiritual anchor it has been for me,” she says. “It is one of the key tenets of my life — in my work and in my sobriety and in my family life. It has given my life purpose.” Again and again, over the years, 5
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